The Adventures of Harry Revel - Arthur Quiller-Couch - Book

The Adventures of Harry Revel

E-text prepared by Lionel Sear

When I started to set down these early adventures of Harry Revel, I meant to dedicate them to my friend Mr. W. F. Collier of Woodtown, Horrabridge: but he died while the story was writing, and now cannot twit me with the pranks I have played among his stories of bygone Plymouth, nor send me his forgiveness—as he would have done. Peace be to him for a lover of Dartmoor and true gentleman of Devon!
So now I have only to beg, by way of preface, that no one will bother himself by inquiring too curiously into the geography, topography, etc. of this tale, or of any that I have written or may write. If these tales have any sense of locality, they certainly will not square with the ordnance maps; and even the magnetic pole works loose and goes astray at times—a phenomenon often observed by sailors off the sea-coast of Bohemia.
It may be permissible to add that the story which follows by no means exhausts the adventures, civil and military, of Harry Revel. But the recital of his further campaigning in company with Mr. Benjamin Jope, and of the verses in which Miss Plinlimmon commemorated it, will depend upon public favour.
A.T. QUILLER-COUCH. THE HAVEN, FOWEY, March 28th, 1903.
A.T. QUILLER-COUCH. THE HAVEN, FOWEY, March 28th, 1903.

My earliest recollections are of a square courtyard surrounded by high walls and paved with blue and white pebbles in geometrical patterns—circles, parallelograms, and lozenges. Two of these walls were blank, and had been coped with broken bottles; a third, similarly coped, had heavy folding doors of timber, leaden-grey in colour and studded with black bolt-heads. Beside them stood a leaden-grey sentry-box, and in this sat a red-faced man with a wooden leg and a pigtail, whose business was to attend to the wicket and keep an eye on us small boys as we played. He owned two books which he read constantly: one was Foxe's Martyrs , and the other (which had no title on the binding) I opened one day and found to be The Devil on Two Sticks .

Arthur Quiller-Couch
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2007-01-03

Темы

England -- Social life and customs -- 19th century -- Fiction; Humorous stories; Foundlings -- Fiction; Boys -- Fiction; Adventure stories

Reload 🗙